On Fri 04-08-23 11:01:39, Ryusuke Konishi wrote: > On Thu, Aug 3, 2023 at 8:46 PM Jan Kara wrote: > > > > On Wed 02-08-23 17:41:21, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > Use the generic setup_bdev_super helper to open the main block device > > > and do various bits of superblock setup instead of duplicating the > > > logic. This includes moving to the new scheme implemented in common > > > code that only opens the block device after the superblock has allocated. > > > > > > It does not yet convert nilfs2 to the new mount API, but doing so will > > > become a bit simpler after this first step. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> > > > > AFAICS nilfs2 could *almost* use mount_bdev() directly and then just do its > > > snapshot thing after mount_bdev() returns. But it has this weird logic > > that: "if the superblock is already mounted but we can shrink the whole > > dcache, then do remount instead of ignoring mount options". Firstly, this > > looks racy - what prevents someone from say opening a file on the sb just > > after nilfs_tree_is_busy() shrinks dcache? Secondly, it is inconsistent > > with any other filesystem so it's going to surprise sysadmins not > > intimately knowing nilfs2. Thirdly, from userspace you cannot tell what > > your mount call is going to do. Last but not least, what is it really good > > for? Ryusuke, can you explain please? > > > > Honza > > I think you are referring to the following part: > > > if (!s->s_root) { > ... > > } else if (!sd.cno) { > > if (nilfs_tree_is_busy(s->s_root)) { > > if ((flags ^ s->s_flags) & SB_RDONLY) { > > nilfs_err(s, > > "the device already has a %s mount.", > > sb_rdonly(s) ? "read-only" : "read/write"); > > err = -EBUSY; > > goto failed_super; > > } > > } else { > > /* > > * Try remount to setup mount states if the current > > * tree is not mounted and only snapshots use this sb. > > */ > > err = nilfs_remount(s, &flags, data); > > if (err) > > goto failed_super; > > } > > } > > What this logic is trying to do is, if there is already a nilfs2 mount > instance for the device, and are trying to mounting the current tree > (sd.cno is 0, so this is not a snapshot mount), then will switch > depending on whether the current tree has a mount: > > - If the current tree is mounted, it's just like a normal filesystem. > (A read-only mount and a read/write mount can't coexist, so check > that, and reuse the instance if possible) > - Otherwise, i.e. for snapshot mounts only, do whatever is necessary > to add a new current mount, such as starting a log writer. > Since it does the same thing that nilfs_remount does, so > nilfs_remount() is used there. > > Whether or not there is a current tree mount can be determined by > d_count(s->s_root) > 1 as nilfs_tree_is_busy() does. > Where s->s_root is always the root dentry of the current tree, not > that of the mounted snapshot. I see now, thanks for explanation! But one thing still is not clear to me. If you say have a snapshot mounted read-write and then you mount the current snapshot (cno == 0) read-only, you'll switch the whole superblock to read-only state. So also the mounted snapshot is suddently read-only which is unexpected and actually supposedly breaks things because you can still have file handles open for writing on the snapshot etc.. So how do you solve that? Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR